U.S. presidential election: why Donald Trump still has a chance of being re-elected, despite unfavorable polls
Three meetings on Monday, October 26 in Pennsylvania, three more on Tuesday in Michigan, Wisconsin and Nebraska, before a new tour of the states he hopes to win in the West, Nevada and Arizona: Donald Trump's election marathon continues unabated. As of the evening of October 27, the incumbent president has already made 45 trips since the end of the nomination conventions on August 27, compared to only 27 for his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden. Four years ago, Donald Trump had traveled the United States with the same energy until the eve of the vote.
For the moment, this debauchery of efforts is hardly paying off. Donald Trump remains behind in terms of voting intentions for the November 3 elections, whether at the national level - purely indicative - as in a good part of the key states, even if the gap may be narrower there.
The last presidential debate had no significant impact on the face of the presidential race. Joe Biden is even on the offensive this week. He went to Georgia on Tuesday and will visit Iowa on Friday, two states clearly won by the Republican in 2016 with respectively 5 points and 9 points ahead of his Democratic opponent at the time, Hillary Clinton.